University of South Carolina Libraries
Chorus Gives Its Christmas Music Agenda The University Chorus will con tinue its fall schedule with sev eral special Christmas programs planned before the holidays begin, David G. Phillips, Jr., director, has said. The chorus will sing at an as sembly program at Dreher High School on Dec. 13 and will then present a program that afternoon Oat the USC Faculty Auxiliary tea. On Dec. 16 the Evening Music Club will hear selections and the pre holiday schedule will end with the chorus' participation in the Uni versity's annual Christmas serv ice, to be held at 11 p.m. Tuesday in the University Chapel. The public is invited 4o the service. Officers of the University Chorus are Edwin P. Arnold, president; Rex King, vice-presi dent; Anna Boswell, secretary; Leila Grace Roseborough and Mary Duke Martin, section lead eys; and Patricia Caughman, ac companist. Chorus Members Other members of the chorus include Carolyn Ellie Adams, Evelyn H. Adams, Donald Brown, Gerald Brown, Harold Derrick, Beverly Finlayson, Alyce Anne Fulmer, Nancy Jane Hayes, Anne Jennings, Hubert Maupin, Norma Patterson, Cora Russel, Anna Shealy, Carol Sherrill, Marion Singley, Grace Marie Sturkie, Jimmy Taylor and Shirley Thorn ton. Also, Don Bedenbaugh, Edna Evans, Jacob Highsmith, Gloria Hooker, Heyward Hoover, Barbara Livingston, Linda Sue Howard, Wilber Thompson, and Richard Huggins. Also, William Jackson, Beverly Kennedy, David Pierce, Sarah Wil liams, James Merchant, Henrietta McMaster, Robert Sikes, Robert Whitmire, T. L. Blackmore, John Patrick Murphy, Addie Louise Wise, and A. D. King. Placement * Interviews Announced Placement interviews for the week of Dec. 16 through Dec. 20 have been scheduled as follows. Interested students may contact the c o m p a n y representatives through the schools where the interviews are set up. Monday, Dec. 16 Repr'esentatives from Vickers, Inc. will be in the School of Engi neering from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. to talk with seniors in Mechanical Engineering, Physics, Industrial, and Electrical Engineering. Tuesday, D)ec. 17 Recruiters from Minneapolis Honeywell Regulator Company wvill be in the School of Engineer ing from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. for a seniors or graduate students in Electrical, Mechanical Engineer ing, Math, andl Physics. Representatives from the Inter national Business Machines will ailso be in the School of Engineer ing to interview Electrical Engi neers. They wvill also interview in the School of Business Admin istration majors in Accounting, 0Economics, Math, Physics, Bus iess Administration and women Education majors for positions as Systems Service representatives. Wednesday, Dec. 18 International Business Machines Corporation will continue inter viewing~in both the School of En gineering andi the School of Bus iness Administration. Representatives from Bureau of Public Roads will be in the School of Engineering from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. for .Juniors and Seniors majoring in Civil Engineering. Interviewers from Crawford and * Company Insunsnee Adjusters will be in the School of Business Ad ministration from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. to interview seniors in Business Administration and Liberal Arts. Law Handbook #Is Distributed To Subscribers South Carolina Evidence, a 200 page handbook written by Judge M. S. Whaley, a special consultant at the University Law School, was dlistributedi free to subscribers of the Law Quarterly, Dean Samuel L. Prince of the Law School, said. The book parallels his course in Evidence which he teaches in the L.aw School, Dean Prince said. E '.... MEMORIES, GIFTS OF AGE corner of Senate and Pickens before the Civil War. The houw seum, was once occupied by the editing the book Planters and i 'PLANTERS AND BUS! Former D Story In I By Harriet Clare Sinkler Staff Writer Mrs. Arney R. Childs, former Dean of Women of the Univer sity, makes use of a wide per sonal knowledge and skill in editing "Planters and Business men," a record of the Guignard family of South Carolina. This volume, which has been published by the University is based on personal papers and letters chosen by the editor from more than 3,000 manuscripts which were presented to the South Caroliniana Library in 1951. An introduction of 10 pages presents the history of the fam ily in brief, and the five sec tions of the 160-page book trace the generations from 1795 to 1930. The first of the family cited is John Gabriel Guignard who acquired considerable tracts of land in Edgefield and Orange burg counties and in Columbia. In 1790, he served as treasurer of the Upper Division of South Carolina. Following through the successive descendants, the TASYED STEAl WR4Th. YOU 1hY OUR OWh FAMOUS -STE .1CS . . . The Guignard home, one of Streets, its architecture retaining the e, which has recently become the p Guignard family whose generations ieinessmen. NESSIEN' ean Gives C ler Latest F history of the Guignards closely parallels that of Columbia and the state. From Village to City The book cites that the Guig nards shared in the development of the new state capital from a straggling village to a city, through its hardships in war and reconstruction, to the rebuilding from (lire poverty a structure worthy of state tradition. As planters, the Guignards were hard workers and good slave-masters, the book relates. It is interesting to note the description of the plantation structure and the reform meth ods used in dealing with the slaves. During the 1830's and 1840's, the functions of the plantation were carried on al most exclusively by the slaves who served as blacksmiths, cob blers,. carpenters, and seam stresses. Brick Making The brick-making was begun over a hundred years ago, al though little effort wvas concen trated on this industry prior to nAYS~ L BROILED AKS Moo .m_ Columbia's oldest, stando at the memories which were engendered operty of the Columbia 'Art Mu Mrs. Arney R. (:hildri traced in rumgnard Oook Jij 1880. As the author points out, the brick making industry has proven lucrative for the Guig nards. The last chapter of the hook concerns the late G. Alec Guig nard, pioneer in the planning of the state hydro-electric power and former owner of the site of the Lake Murray I)am. The cover of this volume fea tures a picture of the compass used by John Gabriel Guignard in laying out Columbia in 1786. The Guignard family estab lished through an endowment the Guignard Lecture series which is given at the University in honor of the late C. A. Guig nard, Columbia industrialist. civic leader and philanthropist. "He gets a lot to li A filter that r flavor. And1 the flu Philosophy Staff Lists Publications Several members of the Philo '-ophy Staff had article~s published in l'rofessional Jotrrnals, this v:.r. (other- artices have been a("1"c11ted for pIullication in 1958. le group inelles: l). 'l'loadore L,:fferty, who lmon oteuI : 1cmper, "Basic Meth ('11 of S("cIntif'i( E.xpl:an:ation," at :he Southern Soiety for Philo tophy aInI I' -ychology last semtes ter, has written; "Reality and Values" which i4 forthce>ming in Bullet in of the South Carolina .\eademty" of Sciences. )r. .11:eph -liolis hat had :1 great, many article.4 uleishiel this yt':11 inlclud4ing seeral revie-ws. I'he li::t inchilts; "(On V:tlte 'I'heory. ly Way of tIhe ('omlon pl:e.," Ih'ilosoplhy an< l'ienonien "logical Research. .1 une; "Notes on tihe. . ;(e 1,f Simile. Met1phol-, and .\nlog.v," .\merican Speech. () toher; "'he Riole of the Segrega t tiomiSt . \ \ ll' ISulletin, -)ecem her; and "''he Idhntity of a Work - f Art." whih is f'thto ing Inl \linld. (1111" tI lw Iom11In :irtic h-s In 1h"inle; "leIigion Revisite<l," The P'ersonalist ; "Kafa v-. Euilai nonia and )uty," l'hilosophy and l'henotinologieal Research; and "Oscar Wile'- lheory of Cr-itic ism," Journal of l'hilosophy. His reviews incluItle; Creation and I)iscevery h.v 1-:1i .o \'iva s. .Journal of Philosophy; Tie Lan guage of \'alue edit('d by Ray Lepley, l'hilosophy and l'heno mionoloLrgical Rtesearch; Santayana and the Sense of lleauty hy Wil lar<h A rnet t. .lurnal of Philosophy; Art and .\nalysis by Edward Bal l:trd. .lournal of l'hilosophy The logic of loral D)iscourse by Paul I";(1w:mils, Journal f!' Philosophy. I). Panavot. lIutchvarov has written the following; "Concrete Entities and Concrete Relations," The Review of Mletaphysics, 'March; "The Self and l'erceptions: A St ud(ly in lI IlIman I'hilosophy," Philosophical Quarterly, forthcom ing; "Th)e ('u1n '0e l of '.>ssibility,'" 'hilosoph.v and i'hemonenological Research. forthuncminr; and ''Con cerning Ilumec's Doctrine of St.lf," ab-tract in It lletin of the South Carolina .\cadem.V of Science. fort hcom)1int1. A ke-fidter, flavor, flip -toj neans business. An easy p-top box that ends crusi OPPORTUNITY SCHO Educator 1 At Hypatia Dr. Wil Lou Gray who has years as an outstanding South ( at the Hypatian Literary Soci Tuesday, in the Russell Hou: IBarbara Hawthorne has said. Ji Mipon. loeurd. .Spoeun S 0: ON CAMPUS : I'rofenuor in 11amrilton Rayl iny, "Now cerybody make 100 oin this tegt Friday/ because it weill he so murrch eanic'r to l/radec. * ! h .9lale sltudent, after lihltingl/ cillaret('te, hryingl to blow light er (u,t. without ilcceeding. Sims coed declaring, "Noie if ree had studied that hard fu-rn nights, (re mriyht bare kno,en snmelhinllt/!" Novrire smoker trying to light filler" end of egurette. . x Male ctrient carrying Ctced in his arms fron IRussell l/.iste In fraternity rote. Ii Five male stidents eating breakfast in leasscll 1Iose cafeteria dressted in fur and tails. Black acnd wchite cat curled up asleep in a four-fout square hole which wias dug for a tree near the Adini,iRtration Huild gIy. (llimistic nales liring on horseshoe hoping for female L conipany by hanging sign in ,* u-indow sayiny. ("Girl ncanted." A One law student saying to 1 atnothcr oin the way to the bas- S ketball game last taturday, M "I'hecn are you yoiny to I stdy -/?" leply of other ntudent, N "!)n,rinq intermission at the R /ame, of coulrse!" ;k box."The works. draw that's all ied cigarettes. OL FOUNDER Vill Speak n Banquet retired this year from 55 'arolina educator will speak ety fall banquet at 6 p.m. ;e Assembly Room, Critic At the General Assembly last ne she presented to the state of )Uth Carolina the deed fee simple the Opportunity School prop ty, approximately 1,000 acres, orth nearly $2 million. She ob ined this from the federal gov )r. Wil Lou Gray nmcnt by conducting a project adult elementary and high ho,,l education, the Opportunity -hool, for 10 years. The University gave Doctor ray tihe Algernon-Sidney Sulli in A ward in 1937 for "holding it her hands in loving service her fellowman." She now holds the post of Di ctor Emeritus of the Opportun y School. -ifteen new members will be itiated into the society at the nquct. Initiation ceremonies ill be lead by Vice-President Jo lien Bradham. The initiates are Grace Adams, arjorie Blackwell' Anna Boswell, unda J. Carney, Linda Craven, arcia Fletcher, Georgia Ann enry and Sue Howes. Also, Marian Jeter, Linda Jones, ary Edgar McClung, Sandra crry, Penny Sinclair, Ann Vic ,ry and Joanna Walker. oa. **r Sa'e n e8L=R se e